Skip to main content

UK is pothole failure among OECD nations

The Local Government Association says information shows that nearly US$5.1 billion was spent in 2006 on UK local road maintenance compared with $2.54 billion in 2019.
By David Arminas August 30, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
The UK’s pothole problem deepens (image World Highways/David Arminas)

Local road repair spending in the UK has been slashed more than in nearly all OECD countries, according to the Local Government Association.

The association, which represents councils across England and Wales, has analysed figures from the OECD – Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development - a group of 38 ‘high income countries’. The information shows that nearly US$5.1 billion was spent in 2006 on UK local road maintenance compared with $2.54 billion in 2019 - the last year of comparable data available, according to the LGA.

This is compared to Sweden, Denmark, the US, Japan and New Zealand which have increased spending by around half over the same period. Countries including France, Finland and Canada have also protected pothole repair budgets more than the UK Government has.

Only Italy and Ireland have seen such similar drops in spending on local roads.

The LGA said it wants to work with the UK government on a devolved, long-term plan for local road maintenance. Included should be greater and more consistent funding to get investment in roads back up to the levels of other leading countries.

The association said the central government spends 31 times more per mile - 1.6km - on maintaining motorways than local roads. LGA is calling on all political parties to pledge to a 10-year programme that would support road repairs through a fuel duty.

This needs be accompanied by fully devolved powers to councils over all local transport, with five-year funding settlements such as is done for national bodies such as Network Rail and National Highways – the agency that maintains the major road network in England. This would also allow investment in more sustainable and lower carbon forms of local transport as the government works towards net zero.

The LGA’s analysis is “no surprise”, said Rick Green, chairman of the UK’s Asphalt Industry Alliance. “The picture of managed decline reflects the findings of our Annual Local Authority Road Maintenance (ALARM) survey,” he said.

“The link between continued under-investment and the ongoing structural decline and below-par surface conditions of our local roads is clear. ALARM 2023 reported that it would now take £14.02 billion [$17.8 billion], the highest recorded in 28 years of ALARM surveys, to tackle the backlog of repairs and bring them up to a condition from which they could be effectively managed going forward.”

Green said he believes that more local highway budget ringfencing is needed to ensure that funds are directed to the type of works that deliver the best value for money and improving the resilience of the local road network.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • UK council plans €64 million highways upgrade
    August 17, 2012
    UK-based Milton Keynes Council is to borrow €64 million (£50 million) for a new road repair programme to tackle the city’s “decaying" roads and pavements. The 1960’s new town, which is located about an hour’s drive north of London, has approved a plan which includes more than €27 million (£21 million) for vital road repair work, €18 million (£14 million) to tackle its ageing bridges and more than €9 million (£7 million) to restore the council’s pavement and footpath network.
  • Rural Roads for Development: a chat with Dr Michael Burrow
    October 8, 2019
    For the last seven years the University of Birmingham has been organising – together with IRF (Geneva) the Rural Roads for Development course in Birmingham. The week-long course is very much a hands-on course delivered by experts from around the world on a topic of relevance to the sustainable provision of rural roads. Ahead of this year course edition which will be hosted on 9-13 September, Dr Michael Burrow from Birmingham University answered key questions about rural transport. Q: How can improved rur
  • PPRS speaker and MEP Cramer will urge more road maintenance
    February 3, 2015
    The chairman of the European Parliament’s transport committee wants an emphasis on road maintenance and finishing international connecting roads systems than on new grandiose highways. If national government’s fail to do this, as it’s their responsibility, then the European Union’s major cities can look forward to increasing gridlock in the coming decades. Congestion and maintenance are first and foremost the responsibility of member states and nobody wants to change this,” said Michael Cramer, chairm
  • Call for new ways of funding road infrastructure
    February 16, 2012
    In the first of a two-part article, Jack Opiola, a prominent global expert on transport policy and a leading member of IRF Geneva's Policy Committee on ITS, introduces the urgent need to develop new, more equitable revenue mechanisms to replace fuel taxes as a means of funding and maintaining road infrastructure